Page 8 - Early Chiense White Wares, Longsdorf Collection, 2015, J.J. Lally, New York
P. 8
and bowls, boxes and vases, ewers and other accessories were made pri-
marily for daily use at all levels of Chinese society, with the best designs and
most refined vessels reserved for use by the elite. Order filled!
My style of collecting is a combination of emotional response and careful
analysis. When I find a piece that is very beautiful on its own, outside any
academic or historical context, purely based on aesthetics, I am immediately
compelled to consider it for the collec tion. But first, I try to temper my enthu-
si asm by asking myself the following questions: Is it rare enough to give the
collection some singularity? Does it exemplify one of the game-changing
innovations which impacted the evolution of white ware, such as an especially Catalogue
thin wall, or translucency of the glaze? Is the form new? The cut-rim dishes,
for example, which I love, must have been quite popular at the time. There
are so many versions, several of which are repre sented in the collection.
What do the marks and inscriptions tell us? Finally, does the piece have an
interesting collection and exhibition provenance? If it is truly exemplary by
one or more of these criteria, then I take a deep breath and ask the price.
I only wish I could have been a member of the scholar-elite in China
during the Northern Song dynasty when these superb white wares were in
use at elegant banquets such as the one shown in Emperor Huizong’s famous
painting (fig. 1).
Ronald W. Longsdorf